AUBURN, Ala. – After Ja’Kobe Tharp won the Tennessee state hurdles championship his junior year in high school, college offers quickly followed with coaches telling him how great he was.
All except one. Auburn’s Ken Harnden took a different approach.
“He was the only coach who told me that I wasn’t good at hurdles,” Tharp recalled. “Coming out of high school my senior year, I was U.S. No. 2. He comes to me and says, ‘You really can’t hurdle so we’re going to build you from the ground up.’ That intrigued me. I had a gut feeling that Coach Ken was the coach who could get me where I wanted to be. When somebody tells you you’re not good and you think you are, I want to see what you’re going to do with me.”
The results have been otherworldly.
“He got me to a place that I wouldn’t have believed two years ago,” Tharp told Andy Burcham on the Talking Tigers Podcast.
After Tharp won SEC outdoors and finished second at NCAA outdoors in the 110m hurdles as a freshman in 2025, he and Harnden, the 1995 NCAA 400m hurdles champion at North Carolina, refined Ja’Kobe’s start, trimming it from eight steps to seven before the first hurdle.
“We want my start to be efficient to set me up so I can run fast in the last couple hurdles,” Tharp said. “I’m not trying to destroy people out of the blocks. I’m trying to set myself up to run the best race I can at the end.
“In Lima, Peru, Coach Ken said something that stuck with me. He said it doesn’t matter what happens through six hurdles. What happens after that is what happens after that. The race isn’t over until you cross the finish line and you jump 10 hurdles. I’m never panicking when people are ahead of me at two or three hurdles because I know I’m coming at some point.”
After being cut from his seventh-grade basketball team, Tharp tried track and field. He wanted to run the 100m and 200m – “the fun stuff,” as he calls it – but his middle school coach told the tall youngster his height suited him for hurdles.
“Nobody wants to run hurdles because nobody wants to fall in front of a bunch of people,” Tharp said. “That was a big fear of mine, but I’ve never fallen.”
As a freshman in 2024, Tharp ran 13.20 at NCAA outdoors, finishing second by one hundredth of a second.
“I was devastated,” Tharp said. “The following year, my entire goal was to win indoors and out.”
Done and done. Tharp won both NCAA titles – indoors and outdoors – as a sophomore in 2025. Finishing second at SEC outdoors gave him more motivation for his junior season.